Digital Material Assembly By Passive Means And Modular Isotropic Lattice Extruder System (MILES)
20170043883 ยท 2017-02-16
Inventors
- Matthew Eli Carney (Brookline, MA, US)
- Benjamin Jenett (Cambridge, MA)
- Neil Greshenfeld (Cambridge, MA, US)
Cpc classification
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/106
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E04B1/35
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
B33Y80/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E04B2001/1978
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
B64F5/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E04B1/34331
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
B23P19/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B64F5/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A set of machines and related systems build structures by the additive assembly of discrete parts. These digital material assemblies constrain the constituent parts to a discrete set of possible positions and orientations. In doing so, the structures exhibit many of the properties inherent in digital communication such as error correction, fault tolerance and allow the assembly of precise structures with comparatively imprecise tools. Assembly of discrete cellular lattices by a Modular Isotropic Lattice Extruder System (MILES) is implemented by pulling strings of lattice elements through a forming die that enforces geometry constraints that lock the elements into a rigid structure that can then be pushed against and extruded out of the die as an assembled, loadbearing structure.
Claims
1. A system implementing modular isotropic lattice extrusion comprising: a chain of pre-assembled voxels acting as a material feed; an assembly platform for locomotion and joining of the material feed, having a locking mechanism and a secondary locking mechanism, that uses guide rails as a forming die using geometry constraints to lock elements of the material feed together; and a motion mechanism that enables the material feed to be fed to the assembly platform and to be locomoted through the assembly platform, and forces a final joined assembled isotropic lattice ready for structural applications out of the assembly platform.
2. The system of claim 1, wherein the assembly platform is modular.
3. The system of claim 1, wherein the pre-assembled voxels are polyhedra with connections along a node such that a chain of polyhedra may be formed with at least one degree of freedom between each neighboring polyhedra element.
4. The system of claim 1, wherein the pre-assembled voxel chain has a specific distance constraint defining the spacing between the elements.
5. The system of claim 4, wherein the distance constraint defining the spacing between the elements is the dimension of the elements themselves.
6. The system of claim 1, wherein the locking mechanism is an eccentric self engaging cam that is rotated into a locked position by a lever that is pulled past a lock enforcement feature in the die.
7. The system of claim 6, wherein the lock enforcement feature is one from the list of either active or passive, such that if active, lock engagement at specific nodes can be programmatically controlled enabling arbitrary structural geometries to be generated, and if passive, lock engagement may enable construction of bulk materials.
8. The system of claim 1, in connected multiples of itself, whereby an arbitrarily sized extrusion head has the ability to extrude, in parallel, complex cellular lattice structures.
9. The system of claim 1, wherein the forming die is constructed as a modular system attached to a gridded support structure.
10. The system of claim 1, wherein the motion mechanism is a driver cartridge consisting of a motorized screw that pushes along the rigidly assembled structure and the rigidly assembled structure, still being attached to the feedstock, pulls the feedstock into the assembly platform as it is pushed out of the assembly platform.
11. The system of claim 1, wherein the assembly platform comprises four guide rails that support the material feed from all necessary directions such that a single drive mechanism can push four strings of material feed.
12. The system of claim 1, wherein when the locking mechanism is actuated as the material feed passes by an actuating feature along its way through the forming die, thereby reversibly connecting parts of the material feed without any need for external hardware.
13. The system of claim 1, wherein the locking mechanism comprises a self-tightening cammed pin with a tab that is pushed by a passive feature on the apparatus.
14. The system of claim 1, wherein the assembly platform comprises eight guide rail modules, and a single locomotion module is structured to extrude a 4-voxel (22) lattice.
15. A method for modularly extruding an isotropic lattice comprising: feeding, by a motion mechanism, a chain of pre-assembled voxels to an assembly platform; locomoting, by the motion mechanism, the material feed through an assembly platform; joining, by a locking mechanism and a secondary locking mechanism, the material feed, wherein the locking mechanism uses guide rails as a forming die using geometry constraints to lock elements of the material feed together; forcing, by the motion mechanism, a final joined assembled isotropic lattice ready for structural applications out of the assembly platform.
16. A pressure vessel constructed using the method of claim 15.
17. The pressure vessel of claim 16, wherein the pressure vessel is an airplane fuselage.
18. An assembly platform for a modular isotropic lattice extrusion system, the assembly platform comprising: a plurality of guide rail modules for guiding a material feed into its correct orientation; a rear mounting plate grid used to mount the plurality of guide rail modules and enforce spacing between them; a locomotion module having a motor coupled to a driving worm gear, whose control and power are routed through the rear mounting plate grid, and whose pitch and diameter is designed to match the internal spacing of a lattice being constructed around it; wherein the driving worm gear moves a material feed for assembly forward, brings in new material feed and outputs a completed structure.
19. The apparatus of claim 18, wherein each of the plurality of guide rail modules is a structural extrusion capped on 4 sides with a low-friction contact surface.
20. An apparatus implementing a passive cam-lock interface for an assembly platform of a modular isotropic lattice extrusion system, comprising: (A) a voxel in a material chain having a node with a male interface, (B) the male interface being a tapered cylinder having a crescent shape cut out of it used to engage the cam-lock and is forced by guide rails into a neighboring voxel chain with female interfaces; (C) a captive lock pin that is pre-inserted through a guide hole in one of the female interfaces; (D) a pin feature at the bottom of a shaft that keeps in place the lock pin, (E) the male interface being allowed to pass by the lock pin due to a feature in the pin; (F) wherein the lock pin has a lever arm; and wherein the lock pin is passively turned approximately 90 degrees as the material chain passes through the assembly platform, engaging cam-lock interaction between (A) and (E), whereby the male interface is prevented from pulling out, and pulling on it forces the lock pin to rotate in a direction that further tightens the interface.
21. The apparatus of claim 20, wherein a joint formed by cam-lock interface is reversible with no additional hardware.
22. The apparatus of claim 20, wherein motion of the lock pin is provided by a passive or actuated tab feature in the die that directs the lock-pin tab to rotate as the voxels are pulled through the die.
23. A product produced by the process of claim 15.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF INVENTION
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[0037] The triangular components are designed such that load paths align directly at the interface between components. The exact point of load alignment may not necessarily reside within the physical volume of the part, rather a virtual node may exist through which the loads effectively pass. The joint interface transmits primarily axial loads along the struts of the triangle, however it may also be designed such that moment couples are transmitted through the joint. The auxiliary geometry surrounding the interface node provides kinematic alignment features: geometry which passively, and repeatedly align the interfaces with respect to one another. In addition to alignment, the geometry at the interface also provides features for fixturing adjacent cells (
[0038] Geometry of the discrete elements comprise constraints to adjacent cells that fixture their interfaces such that loads are transmitted directly through the geometry of the part. The geometry may include a feature that could be described as a loop, where material of one element surrounds the interface of at least one or more adjacent elements (
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[0040] The part geometry may be comprised of nearly planar shapes with at least one or more bends enabling a material and process independent manufacturing process (
[0041] Assembly of the discrete elements exploits the integration of geometry between the discrete elements and the assembler mechanisms. Alignment features are shared between the two systems to balance complexity between the part and the machine. Previous digital material assemblers specified a machine that included: a chassis, connected to a locomotion or actuation system, connected to an assembly head, and connected to a parts feeder, all of this controlled by a computer processor. The geometry of the assembler in this embodiment integrates part feeding, locomotion, and chassis into one system. This assembler also removes the requirement for position controlled actuation, and removes the computer processor requirement; it can be driven with or without at least one prime mover. By making part placement with respect to the assembler, the number of assembler subsystems are reduced, and placement is made relative only to immediately local lattice elements, rather than discrete locations across the global structure, and the placement uncertainty is further reduced.
[0042] Three example embodiments are described that integrate multiple subsystems and remove the computer control requirement by integrating mechanical design with the periodic, structured nature of the lattice. The geometry of the assembler is designed to match the physical, periodic dimensions of the lattice. This allows mechanical timing of end-effector/foot trajectory through conventional power transmission systems (such as linkages, gears, belts, cables, track followers, hydraulics, pneumatics). Electrical timing is also possible by use of processor controlled actuators. The integration of locomotion actuation with parts placement also integrates error correction. At each step along the lattice the assembler becomes locked to the structure by attaching to either an already placed part or feeding a new part into place. The feeding mechanism is passive, such that a part is automatically driven into place by a stored energy mechanism. Parts are stored either locally in a magazine cartridge, a reel of components, remotely in a hopper type of system. Intermediate assembly mechanisms may also co-exist that allow more dense packing of discrete elements before being formed into cells to be placed. In some embodiments discrete elements may be formed into discrete cells which are then placed into the lattice.
[0043] Similar to a swiss screw machine mechanism features internal to the machine produce desired output: the timing, trajectories and forces necessary to perform the assembly or disassembly process. Mechanical timing is possible due to the periodic lattice structure and reduces the need for a computer based control system at the assembler level. In some instances it may still be beneficial to retain a computer control where sizing and integration of mechanical power transmission systems is non-trivial, or for convenience or flexibility in design.
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[0046] An active carrier based method of assembly is possible where the discrete elements have a distance constraint formed by a rigid intermediary component connected by pivots, composing the discrete elements into a chain. A rack and pinion type of arrangement of rollers feeds the elements into the lattice, while locomoting along the lattice. The rigid elements pivot on their integrated carrier as they roll along the rollers, similar to a chain on a sprocket. The arrangement of adjacent rollers enables connecting the chains into volume enclosing structures.
[0047] Another embodiment of the assembler trades the carrier distance constraint for a mechanical timing constraint. In this way the discrete elements require no carrier. The track still provides the passive trajectory control while an active mechanism times the dispersal of discrete elements from their storage location and along the track. The latching may be performed by tooth geometry, adhesion such as vacuum, magnetics, hook and loop, adhesive bond, etc. Upon attachment of element to lattice the latch disengages. This mechanism may also provide a locomotion system that traverses along the already formed structure, such that the assembly is capable of self locomotion along the lattice.
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[0051] The chain of elements is pulled through a forming die that forces the elements into the final configuration orientated relative to neighboring strings of elements (
[0052] This lock enforcement feature may be active or passive such that lock engagement at specific nodes can be programmatically controlled enabling arbitrary structural geometries to be generated, or, it may be passive in the case of constructing large bulk materials. A motion inducing mechanism then forces the already assembled, rigid, structure out of the die. This system can be constructed as a standalone module or it can then be assembled alongside other modules into extensible arrays of modules (
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[0054] The extensibility of modules enables the formation of an arbitrarily sized extrusion head that has the ability to extrude, in parallel, complex, discrete cellular lattice structures (
[0055] As described, MILES consists of three main components: the material feed is a chain of pre-assembled voxels, fed through a forming die that locks the elements together, and is fed by motion mechanism.
[0056] The pre-assembled voxel chains are fed into the MILES platforms with a specific distance constraint defining the spacing between the elements. In other systems, such as the standard zipper, the locking components are fed along a secondary tensile carrier that enforces the distance constraint. In MILES the interlocking elements are integral to the structural lattice itself, reducing the feed stock to a single type of feed element.
[0057] Upon entering the locomotion and joining station, they are forced into their final configuration by guide rails that are essentially a forming die. This forming die may be constructed as a modular system attached to a gridded support structure. The two universal cartridge types are the driver cartridge or motion mechanism, and, the rail cartridge. In one embodiment the driver cartridge consists of a motorized screw drive that pushes along the rigidly assembled structure. The rigidly assembled structure, still being attached to the feedstock, pulls the feedstock into the forming module as it is pushed out of the module. The rail cartridge has 4 guide rails to support the feed stock from all necessary directions such that a single drive mechanism can push four strings of feedstock (
[0058] Next, the passive locking feature that rigidly constrains the neighboring strings is actuated, reversibly connecting the parts without any need for external hardware, as it passes by an actuating feature along its way through the forming die. The design for this locking feature is based on a self-tightening cammed pin (this locking mechanism is similarly used in triple for attaching a chuck to the spindle of a lathe (
[0059] What is further unique to MILES is its modularity. The basic MILES unit can extrude a 4-voxel (22) lattice, and to do so uses 8 guide rail modules and a single central locomotion module. These modules are designed to mount to a rear mounting plate grid, which can be of any dimension necessary. This modular system enables simplified expansion with the addition of more modules. This allows customized extruder platforms to be quickly setup without relying on monolithic gantry-type elements. This way it will be possible to extrude large high performance structures such as aerospace components.
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[0061] While the above specification and examples provide a description of the invention, many embodiments of the invention can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. It is to be understood that the foregoing embodiments are provided as illustrative only, and does not limit or define the scope of the invention. Various other embodiments are also within the scope of the claims.